There
was no band for me in New York. There was toiling at
a record company, cocktail waiting at CBGBs, attending
an endless string of rock shows, and playing music at
pay-per-hour studios. But there was no time for a band.
I was on an express train speeding by a landscape of
rockers who blended together in a black denim blur.
I
wanted a change. I needed one more class to finish college,
so I decided to go back to Chapel Hill, where tuition
would be cheap. My savings could float me for summer
school. I was going to stay for a month and then move
to San Francisco. Something American in me pulled west.
***
When
I got to Chapel Hill, I moved into the kind of house
I had seen in Slacker and had been totally envious of.
The bong in the living room smoked like a gun, lending
the room an air of light-hearted crime. There was a
stack of vinyl on the carpet, a turntable, a TV to watch
The Simpsons on, and a plethora of foxes.
***
I
moved in with Jamie, the foxiest of foxes, who did bong
hits in the morning and played guitar scientifically.
She hid in her room experimenting with alternative tunings
and homemade pedals. She ate food from her garden and
knew how to hem a dress.
MacPhail
came over in the afternoons before work. She had recently
acquired a blue metal-flake drum kit in exchange for
babysitting. She painted, welded, tended bar, and could
roll a joint with one hand.
Lizzie
had stringy blond hair and drove around in her pickup
listening to Dolly Parton. She had thin lips, a high
voice and an unidentified Southern accent. In a crowd,
all you could hear from Lizzie were vowels.
I
was psyched. Cheap rent, easy living, good girlfriends.
***
Lizzie
and MacPhail lived in a house out in the country, where
you could hear a bee fly by, loud as a truck. We set
up MacPhails drums and a couple amps in the living
room and became giddy with noise. I had a black Hondo
bass and a Peavey practice amp that screeched. Lizzie
played my old guitar, or pounded on the xylophone (the
top of the mallet often shot off like a bullet), or
emitted feedback on her souped-up accordion. We plugged
in, cooked food, wrote songs. We didnt have a
plan to be a Big Rock Band, we played because we could.
Besides, I was in a high glam period. I was dying to
rock.
Playing
with them made me think of my grandmother and her sisters.
They were Rock Stars of the Living Room -- Mema on the
autoharp, Aunt Foy on the banjo, Aunt Kate and Aunt
Ethel on kazoos. Their singing, especially Aunt Foys,
sounded sort of off and yet sacred, like those Tibetan
monks who can hit two notes at the same time. These
women appeared to me in a vision, like elders from Wonder
Woman Island, and said, "Get it, girl."
***
Lizzie,
Jamie, MacPhail and I had been playing together for
about a month when we got a show at the indie rock mothership,
the Hardback Cafe. We named ourselves Speed McQueen,
inspired by the giant Speed Queen clock in the kitchen.
Our
first show sold out. There were people lined up outside
the door. Chapel Hill had an automatic audience for
almost anything; kids flocked to the rock shows. Lizzie
and I were amped -- the limelight! The outfits! But
when Jamie and MacPhail saw how many people were there,
MacPhail got really quiet and Jamie threw up.
Standing
on the stage that first night, looking out the window
at all the people who couldnt even get in, I felt
I had crossed an invisible line. No longer would I have
to sit in an office watching bands strut around, I was
on the inside! I WAS A ROCK STAR. Who has never wanted
to be a rock star? Who has never longed to put a foot
up on a monitor and yell to a sea of seething fans,
THANK YOU, TOKYO!
I
was hooked.
Id
like to say we were great that night but all I remember
is that I screamed a lot and had a good hair day. What
we lacked in skill, we made up for in volume and style.
After the show, an interviewer shoved a mic in our faces,
a flashbulb clicked. I imagined myself in an over-exposed
photo, shielding my eyes with my hands. We even made
a little cash. We shouldve started a band fund
for recording and road trips, but we split the dough
at the end of the night.
***
My
summer class came and went, but I stayed because Chapel
Hill still seemed glamorous. I only had to work enough
to pay $165 for rent. Everything was so cheap, I ran
out of money. I realized that the spend-no-money, make-no-money
equation equaled simply, no money. San Francisco was
far away again and I didnt care. It was fun to
perch on rooftops and watch the sun come up, swim naked
in a pond at 4am, and of course, play in a band.
Music
in Chapel Hill was untainted. I wasnt thinking
about who was on what label, or what was in heavy rotation.
I wasnt eyeballing the crowd for connections.
Art for arts sake. Also, there was more than the
occasional female bassist, there were (almost) as many
girl bands as boy bands. I was in my element.
We
booked more shows.
The
next time we played out, Lizzie threw up. The next one,
MacPhail did. At least one of us puked at each of our
first four shows. My turn came when a music business
friend flew in from New York. I had been up there at
a party, hyping our show. I didnt expect anyone
to actually come to it; I just wanted to talk up our
stage tricks and zany outfits. Promoter habits die hard.
The afternoon of the show I got an ugly stomach virus.
When the record company guy walked into the club I was
dozing on the bar next to my ginger ale waiting for
sound check. I had promised matching jumpsuits and dance
routines, but delivered a subdued sea of solipsism.
The only reality was the one in my head saying, try
not to puke on his shoes. That night the crowd was lame.
I couldnt even scream. It was an un-Zen moment
where I couldnt bear the present and tried to
speed up time by zipping through the songs. I left the
stage mid-set to puke. I never talked to that record
guy again.
Typical.
Its
not that we didnt want to get signed, we were
still shocked that we were playing in front of people.
It was a hoot. We werent exactly business-like.
A small label in Chapel Hill eventually got us into
a studio to record a few songs. We felt very fancy in
there, separating each song and putting it back together
like layers on a cake. While recording vocals, I imagined
myself as Keith from the Partridge Family -- he has
one hand on his big mushy earphone, the other on his
hip, and his shaggy head tilted up towards the mic.
Standard rock pose. In real life, I was in a soundproofed
bedroom howling into a microphone that hung from the
ceiling like a noose, my voice dangling, dead and limp
inside it.
One
song came out well, "Burn." We listened to
the mix in Jamies car because the cassette player
in the studio was, of course, broken. It sounded like
a real song! Im gonna burn this town, Im
gonna burn it to the ground. It was slow and moody.
I wrote the song in my range i.e. it sounded like a
cartoon dirge. Jamie sang backup and played a melodic
guitar part, Lizzie honked away on the accordion like
a musical goat. MacPhail kept a solid simple beat in
4/4 time. There were only two parts to this song and
we mastered them. An old phrase from my seventh grade
science teacher floated through my head "K.I.S.S.
-- keep it simple, stupid." Maybe there was hope
for us. We could keep it simple, stupid. The guys who
recorded us even seemed excited, but we never pressed
it. Thats how things went. We talked about pressing
singles, recording albums, playing out of town, setting
things on fire, but days and months went by and nothing
happened. But I wasnt giving up hope. Sonic Youth
wasnt built in a day, I thought.
***
Lizzie
and I continued a long-standing glam off -- who could
find the highest shoes, the dumbest pants, the fuzziest
jacket. We gave up on trying to get Jamie andMacPhail
out of their cords- and-Puma uniforms. We would have
to be glam enough for the rest of them. Lizzie had black
rollerskates and I had white ones. We skated around
town as "Thunder" and "Lightning,"
careening into street signs, working on technique. We
were no strangers to Dada or Evil Kneivel. Lizzie and
I spent at least half of our practice time creating
impossible scenarios for our shows. "Ill
skate out with my hair on fire and you spread eagle
over the drum kit while twirling a knife!"
During
one practice we noticed a cow peeking in the window.
Thats how good we were -- we attracted large farm
animals. MacPhail ran out to herd our fan and her posse
back into their yard. Lizzie tried to get them into
the living room. She thought we could train them and
use them in our show.
"They
wont mind," she swore.
***
Cows
or no cows, we played that town to death. We played
at clubs and bars on the two-mile strip between Chapel
Hill and Carrboro once or twice a month for almost two
years. Free beer became a major incentive. The big crowd
who flocked to rock shows had been deceiving; soon I
knew everybody. I got excited whenever there was someone
in the audience I didnt know because I expected
to have rock star status after the show. But the cute
strangers always shuffled out after the first song.
The
urge to go west kicked back in but I held on to the
rock and roll fantasy that we could tour across the
country.
At
long last we piled in a borrowed van and toured across
the county. We played a show three hours out of town,
on a big stage, with a real emcee who shouted, "Ladies
and gentlemen, lets give it up for Speed McQueen!"
to a nearly empty room. All two of our friends gave
it up for us. Clap, clap.
***
Practices
became few and far between.
We found out there was a boy band from New York called
Speed McQueen. Someone with a sense of humor booked
us both on the same night at a club in Raleigh. The
boys were the typical East Village rockers, all sporting
those tapered black pants from Trash and Vaudeville
that Lou Reed still wears. Their music was totally different
from ours -- they were aging punk rockers trying to
sound like Cheap Trick. We were a symphony of noises.
No crossover, we could all be Speed McQueen! We invited
them to our house after the show. This was no big deal
as there were always people coming over to our house
after two, when the bars closed. Everybody in Chapel
Hill had lived at that house at some point and still
had keys.
The
night the boy band came over, there was a smattering
of people hanging out, but I went upstairs to talk to
a big blond oaf who promised to take me to Montana.
I still needed to go west and the chances of our big
tour werent looking so good. Maybe Jamie went
to her room, too. Maybe Lizzie and MacPhail never came
over. I dont remember, all I know is that we left
the boy band alone in the beer-stained living room.
They mumbled something into Jamies room about
getting gas for their trip back and disappeared into
their shiny rental van.
Later
that week their lawyer called. We got a lawyer friend
to represent us but we never had to go to court or anything.
I think Speed McQueen New York was just trying to scare
us. Even though we realized we had the name first, we
were lazy. There, I said it -- we were lazy. Speed McQueen
New York got signed to a major and a friend called to
tell me they were plastered all over Tower Records on
4th Street. Our lawyer died in a car accident. We gave
up that fight.
To
make matters worse, Jamie started playing with another
band, William Christ Supercarr. They were very serious
and practiced a lot. We made the grave mistake of letting
them open for us.
It
was a miserable night around Christmas and we hadnt
seen each other in weeks because of the holidays. Usually
we got together before a show, but that night we made
a haphazard set list over the phone and agreed to meet
at the club. My El Camino the ultimate rock machine
-- was docked in the yard, broken again, so I had to
beg Lizzie for a ride. My amp rode shotgun and her dog
and I hopped in the back of her truck.
If
we knew we were going to suck, we either made our hair
really big or got wasted. I worried when I saw Lizzie
that night, her hair had Nashville height. I took half
a hit of blotter assuming that Jamie or MacPhail would
take the other half later. I didnt offer it to
Lizzie; she got drunk off one beer and never smoked
pot. No one ate the other half.
The
thing about the automatic Chapel Hill audience, was
that it left town on holidays and then you were left
with the same fifteen people you saw every day crawling
in your kitchen window to use the bong.
Lizzie
and I sat at the bar while MacPhail played pool in the
back room. My palms began to sweat. Lizzie cracked a
second beer. I felt the beginnings of a trip that never
totally materialized, all I noticed was a trace of strychnine
which I tried to cut with Pabst Blue Ribbon in a can.
I realized taking acid alone was maybe a really bad
idea. William Christ went on very late. They played
a very tight, oddly LONG set to a happy crowd. We were
supposed to go on at eleven. Midnight came and went,
our "opening" band played on and on. We continued
to drink heavily.
People
began to leave as last call was around the corner. I
shouldve been relieved. I shouldve encouraged
them all to run screaming from that place but I was
pissed. Everyone must suffer with me.
Finally
about one, the last note of William Christ rang out.
We climbed on stage like drunk monkeys and plugged in.
Someone put a ten-gallon cowboy hat on my head. It was
beige. I fancied myself a rocker, but I looked more
like the hunk-a-cheese guy from Schoolhouse Rock. Jamie
noodled around loudly on her guitar while the rest of
us set up.
Lizzie
teetered on her platforms and seemed perturbed, but
it was so loud all I could hear were those Lizzie vowels,
"eeuuaa
."
"Whats
your problem?" I said.
She
pushed my ear shut with her finger (this actually helped)
and yelled, "Itd be easier to get set up
if it wasnt so loud." She was referring to
Jamies screeching guitar.
Before
I could respond, MacPhail clicked her drumsticks twice.
Amazingly, we all started playing at the same time.
We were so excited about that it took us a few minutes
to realize we were each playing a different song.
We
stopped and looked at each other. We ignored our audience.
More people left. I scooched the hat further down on
my face. MacPhail yelled out a song and we played it
completely out of sync. We fumbled through some bastard
child of our set.
As we packed up that night, I noticed Lizzie having
a heated conversation with her amp.
"Whats
up Lizzie?" I asked while winding cords around
my elbow.
"I
never turned that thing on!" she yelled, smirking.
She was wearing earplugs.
I
was mortified. Everything had gotten so stupid. I lived
about half a mile away, so I threw my guitar over my
shoulder and dragged my heavy amp out the door. I dont
need anybody! I had just hauled it (thump thump thump)
up the stairs and had begun scraping it along the sidewalk
when Jamie pulled up beside me and insisted on giving
me a ride. She laughed. She dropped me off at home and
went to her other bands house.
I
stood in the yard after she had driven away and decided
I WAS NOT A ROCK STAR. I was a loser. I was waiting
tables and playing bad shows in exchange for Pabst Blue
Ribbons. Nothing else was going to happen.
I
had to leave town.
Not
just in general, but immediately, as in I wanted to
wake up in another state. At this point the beers should
have led me up to my bed, but the acid gave me a sense
of purpose.
I
ran into the arms of my El Camino. I thought I could
start it with sheer will power. I got behind the wheel
and turned the key -- the engine almost rolled over.
The battery wasnt dead, so I cranked up AC/DCs
"Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap." If I could
get my Camino started, I planned on driving until I
ran out of gas or broke down, then Id live there
for awhile, whether it be Durham or Las Vegas.
The
goddamn Camino refused to start. I was trapped. Everything
that was going to happen to me in Chapel Hill had happened.
That was it. I felt like Id been duped, tricked
somehow. We werent going to tour, I had no money,
and my car was broken. I crumpled in a pitiful fit of
tears. Go, El Camino, I cried, go!
I
heard a little tap on my window. I looked up, embarrassed
that Id been caught. A guy who had been at the
show stared in at me. Hell say, "You guys
rocked," I hoped. I rolled down the window.
"Your
brake lights are on," he said calmly. He was one
of those Chapel Hill coolies who never revealed any
emotion. Hed been in bands since I was in high
school. Months before he had noticed I was using my
pinky when I played bass -- he was offended. "You
dont actually want to get good, do you?"
I had a tremendous crush on him.
He
pointed out that I had been stomping my foot on the
brake, broadcasting a red disco light of pain throughout
the neighborhood. He acted like he saw that sort of
thing every night. Maybe he did. He was so steeped in
his own depression, nothing affected him. He walked
away, probably humming a Smiths song.
"Fuck
him. Fuck this town. Fuck this El Camino," I thought.
I slammed the giant door and trudged up to my house
and started packing.
***
A
few weeks later a guy I barely knew needed someone to
drive with him to San Francisco. I didnt need
any money for the trip so I parked the Camino in my
sisters yard and gave away all my stuff, except
my guitar and bass, and went with him. I wanted to keep
Speed McQueen together somehow so I suggested we exchange
four-track tapes. I couldnt let go of a lingering
hope that something good could happen.
I
carried my rock and roll dreams with me to San Francisco
where in hindsight, Speed McQueen had been the best
band in the world. I got a CD pressed of our recording
of "Burn."
I
filled up a pile of cassettes with my attempts at four-track
recording, but I never sent them east. They sucked and
besides I always hogged all the tracks.
San Francisco was full of strangers and earthquakes
shook my house too often, so I returned where this began,
New York.
When
I got back east, I went to Chapel Hill for a visit.
I
got there just in time to help MacPhail go through the
charred remains of her house. A loose wire in an upstairs
room had started a fire. She was home but by the time
she noticed it flames licked out of the upstairs windows
like mocking little Satans. MacPhail said she thought
about our song, "Burn" while watching the
fire engulf our old practice space as she waited for
the fire trucks. I helped her try and salvage anything
from the charcoal, but amplifiers were crispy, cymbals
were warped, our old keyboard was wavy and charred.
The burnt instruments were cast out in the yard in a
pattern that from an aerial view, spelled out THE END.
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